Harold
3.5/5
()
Imagination
Childhood
Space Exploration
Dreams
Time
Coming of Age
Wise Old Man
Coming-Of-Age
Power of Imagination
Innocence Lost
Dream Sequence
Wise Mentor
Nostalgia
Innocent Child
Wise Beyond Their Years
Life & Death
Childhood Memories
Childhood & Growing up
Memory
Friendship
About this ebook
Steven Wright is one of the most significant and influential stand-up comedians in history. Rolling Stone ranked him fifteenth on their “50 Best Stand-ups of All Time” list, while the New York Times has written of his enduring legacy: “If you made a family tree of modern stand-up, he would top one of the few major and expanding branches. The children of Mr. Wright pack the comedy scene today.” Now comes his first novel, which is sure to be unlike anything you’ve ever read.
From the outside, Harold is an average seven-year-old third grader growing up in the 1960s. Bored by school. Crushing on a girl. Likes movies and baseball—especially the hometown Boston Red Sox. Enjoys spending time with his grandfather. But inside Harold’s mind, things are a lot more complex and unusual. His thoughts come to him as birds flying through a small rectangle in the middle of his brain. He visits an outdoor cafe on the moon and is invited aboard a spaceship by famed astronomer Carl Sagan. He envisions his own funeral procession and wonders if the driver of the hearse has even been born yet.
Harold documents the meandering, surreal, often hilarious, and always thought-provoking stream-of-consciousness ruminations of the title character during a single day in class. Saturated with the witticisms and profundities for which Wright’s groundbreaking stand-up has long been venerated, this novel will change the way you perceive your daily existence. To quote one of its many memorable lines: “Everything doesn’t have to make sense. Just look at the world and your life.”
Steven Wright
Steven Wright is a clinical associate professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Law School, where he codirects the Wisconsin Innocence Project. From 2007 to 2012 he served as a trial attorney in the Voting Section of the United States Department of Justice. He has written numerous essays about race, criminal justice, and election law for the New York Review of Books.
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Reviews for Harold
21 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 4, 2023
The joy of Steven Wright is that life is a non sequitur. No two thoughts are ever connected. You never know what he will say next, other than it will have nothing to do with what he has already said. So when Steven Wright writes a novel, it would just have to be out there. And so it is, in Harold, Steven Wright’s first novel.Harold is a seven year old third grader with a tremendously independent, unfettered and fertile imagination. (As an infant, his first words were “Your witness.”) In his daily boredom at school, he daydreams. He is the vehicle for a Grand Canyon full of one liners and out there concepts that are the stock in trade of Steven Wright.There is a neat gimmick to deliver all these disparate concepts. Harold has a rectangular frame in his brain, and birds of all stripe from the common to the extinct to the made up, fly through it. That is the cue for a new thought to get himself out of whatever corner he has painted himself into. It works very well, helping to keep the pace dancing. He identifies each bird, but one time “A bird flew through the rectangle so quickly it cannot be described. Like everybody’s life.”The scene is 1961 Massachusetts. Wright tries to bring to life the pop culture of the era, but he seems to bristle at the limitations Harold presents him. So every so often, there are references to Harold thinking about people and events that haven’t happened yet, like the introduction of the Boeing 747 or the pillaging of Vietnam.To be clear, there is no plot, and there are really only four characters of any importance: Harold, his grandfather, a classmate/crush called Elizabeth, and of course his teacher, an Asian woman named Ms Yuka.His memories of them are stereotypical. His grandfather is his favorite. He lives on a lake in Maine, and imparts the wisdom of the ages to Harold (Never do anything a woman tells you). Elizabeth is a seven year old blonde bombshell two rows up, which causes Harold all kinds of confusion, because he somehow knows with certainty he will be hurt and damaged not only by her, but by many women he will be drawn to: “He was aware, even at his age, that if she knew how much he really liked her she would be in charge and his life would be ruined.” His teacher, who he claimed to like, is fed up with Harold’s neverending non sequitur questions, and he fantasizes cursing her and punishing her in interesting ways. When she says “May I have your attention,” under his breath he would say: “Get your own attention.” Or getting permission to go the bathroom, he just sits there: “I don’t have to go, I just wanted to know if I could go.”The stage is set for Harold to escape into a blistering adventure of ideas, thoughts, concepts and observations. They take him to moon, where he meets Carl Sagan (who was totally unknown in 1961) in a plywood spaceship by a lake on the dark side. Sagan is on his way to deliver 500 merry-go-round horses to God’s office in the Milky Way. He gives Harold and Elizabeth wallet sized copies of the famous Blue Dot photo (Earth, seen from space), which would not be shot until several years later. But both Harold and Elizabeth know all about it.Then, to top it off, Wright enters the narrative near the end. He, the narrator, suddenly says “I” in: “This little boy didn’t know what would happen in his life, but I did.” Or if it’s not Wright, who is this sudden new character? Is it God, who has seen fit to torture this child using his own brain? Because throughout the book, Harold continually references God, with the qualifier “if there is a God.” It is the most common meme in the book. Is God simply amused by Harold?The narrator makes one more appearance a little later, saying “I don’t know if you noticed or not but in this story he hardly mentions his own mother.” Well, the narrator declared Harold’s mother mentally ill very early on, and she is not any kind of inspiration or support for Harold, the child or the book.Harold can be rather precocious for a seven year old. His analysis of grade school is “Is this a school or a lobotomy factory?” Wright says Harold is sometimes “like a bird trapped inside a building, desperately trying to find a way back to the sky.” He also maintains he never gets lonely because “the human brain is a portable universe.”There are of course, innumerable quick laughs among all the non sequiturs.-“So when exactly did you lose track of time?”-On trying coffee the first time: “It tastes like cocoa with poison in it.”-On politicians on TV: “ ‘Do you agree that you are not answering the question?’ Then no matter what he says he should be beaten until he’s unconscious on live television with no criminal consequences.”-“He wondered if there could be three dimensional shadows.”-“He thought the white square (of a priest’s collar) looked like a little movie screen and wouldn’t it be great to project a movie right on there.”It’s not the great American novel, but there are so many concepts in it, it could be the basis for a series of books, all totally unrelated. That’s how fertile Wright’s mind is. He can afford to toss off and waste great one-liners just in passing. And there is no doubt whatsoever that these shots are Wright-isms. He’s a unique franchise.Good fun.David Wineberg - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 27, 2023
The inner Harold unveiled!Of course anything Steven Wright puts pen to will be a stream of consciousness seemingly endless.Harold is akin to Wright’s’ inner seven year old boy with an adult understanding, despite his innocence.Dry, remorseless even, in his diatribe, Harold’s imagination is one where adults go to hide. Speaking of hidden, much of Harold’s sideways moves come through a series of rectangular windows opening up in his head. They’re a brilliant segue! Those birds who deliver his thoughts and questions are part of the wonder. And such birds!Harold’s questions are a thing of beauty. Of course they happen on the inside. Ms. Yuka just isn’t worth asking questions of on the outside! Ms.Yuka fortunately is not inside Harold’s head, except in dreams.I hear Wright’s in concert voice, in my head. This is pure Steven Wright blending with the known, yet giving new voices. Ha! Genius! Nobel stuff to me! (a reference!)Harold is like no other thirdrd grade child, he’s Wright’s voice piece—seemingly innocent, maybe stubborn, satirical, ironic, and piercing. A book for those who appreciate Wright and are prepared to put up with his non PC references and entertaining voyeurism. Either brilliant or a complete faux, I’m coming down on the brilliant side.A Simon & Schuster ARC via NetGalley. Many thanks to the author and publisher.
Book preview
Harold - Steven Wright
Chapter 1
Ms. Yuka was standing in front of her desk when she began to brush a small piece of lint off her skirt just above her right knee and Harold wondered if there was more lint in China than in the United States and wondered if it mattered and if so how?
Harold wondered if the Chinese had their own FBI and if it was called the CFBI.
Could the CFBI and the FBI tell the difference between Chinese fingerprints and American fingerprints and he didn’t mean a specific person he meant was there an in general difference?
Then he thought there should be a fistfight between the guy who said no two fingerprints were alike and the guy who said no two snowflakes were alike. A fight to the death.
After Ms. Yuka finished with her US/Chinese lint she said to the class:
Remember to keep working on your book report and your oral presentation which are both due after Christmas vacation which starts Friday.
Harold’s book report was about a book he read about Alfred Nobel who was the guy who invented dynamite.
He worked in a factory as a chemist focussing on explosives. His brother worked there too and was accidentally killed in an explosion.
So Alfred decided to turn this horrible tragedy into something positive.
With the huge fortune he made from dynamite he developed the Nobel Prize which led to the Nobel Peace Prize.
Harold thought if this was true what kind of prizes could the guy who invented the atom bomb come up with?
Maybe the Universe Peace Prize.
Just to torture Ms. Yuka Harold thought of asking her if the book report should be about the subject of the book or a report about how the book was written.
But he didn’t because he was tired and just wasn’t in the mood.
Harold was 7 in 3rd grade at Wildwood Elementary School.
He did more thinking than someone his age. Or any age.
He thought wouldn’t it be great to be able to sleep standing up with your eyes open.
Imagine asking Elizabeth if she would like to meet him some night in the middle of the woods so they could sleep standing up with their eyes open facing each other, and he wondered what kinds of dreams they would have then?
And wouldn’t it be weird if they both had dreams but neither one of them was in the other’s dreams.
Elizabeth was a girl in the class.
Harold thought that Alfred Nobel should have a fistfight with the guy who invented gunpowder whose name nobody knew because it was invented by the Chinese in the 9th century. A fight to the death.
He wondered if Ms. Yuka was related to the guy who invented gunpowder, he thought if she was he would look at her differently.
Harold imagined raising his hand.
Yes Harold?
Are you at all related to the guy who invented gunpowder?
He pictured her looking at him and then, in a gentle but somehow also stern way, saying:
Harold, just pay attention.
In his mind he would say, "I’ll pay attention but I was wondering if over Christmas vacation I could come over to your house and you could make believe you’re the Empress of China and I’m the guy who just invented gunpowder and you wanted to reward me.
How would you feel about that?
Harold loved the birds in his head and Elizabeth and Ms. Yuka once in a while.
Sometimes he imagined he was shipwrecked with Elizabeth and Ms. Yuka on an island that had hundreds of parrots and no other kinds of birds.
The 3 of them would live in 2 different huts.
All the parrots spoke different languages and they were in groups of two so each parrot had another parrot to talk to.
This led to him imagining quietly making little parrot noises to himself just for his own amusement.
Then he thought of Pamela Clancy, who sat right beside him to his left, and what if she looked over and saw him making the little parrot noises.
This seemed so insane and funny to him that he almost peed his pants.
Then he thought that sometimes you see statues of little boys peeing into fountains but you never see statues of little girls squatting down peeing into fountains, he wondered why is that? It could be done if they wanted.
The boy wished he could have been at the meeting where that was decided.
One winter Harold was outside with his sister and she tried to pee her name in the snow and broke her ankle.
He began to pray, even though he wasn’t sure if there was a God, for some kind of bird to fly through the middle of his head to stop all this madness.
A strange sociopath parakeet drifted through the rectangle causing him to put his head down on his desk and fall asleep.
Harold was asleep for about a minute but he had a three and a half hour dream. He thought how can that be?
He assumed that dream time must be different than awake time.
The dream Harold had was about a guy who was trying to train a turtle to be a contortionist.
Harold had some unusual interests:
He loved stencils and the word stencil and what it meant and he thought that if he ever had a little girl he might name her Stencilina.
Hello, I’d like you to meet my daughter Stencilina.
Maybe there could be twins: Stencilina and Stencileenia.
They would be so identical that the only way you could tell them apart was if you wrote their names down.
Then another bird flew through the middle of Harold’s head that made him think that all twins were live stencils.
The boy loved interesting words. Words that had a nice sound combined with what they meant.
Stencil stencil stencil.
In some cases it stunned Harold how things could change.
Like the horrible dictators and mass murderers or murderers in general.
How they were once little babies looking up into someone’s eyes.
How can this be? How?
Harold was a wondering machine.
God made Harold specifically to wonder. If there was a God.
Whenever he heard about somebody’s parents getting divorced he liked to imagine the girl walking down the aisle and then the priest saying:
You may now kiss the bride.
And then later there they are sitting at tables on opposite sides of the courtroom all serious and sad and angry.
Harold thought wouldn’t it be weird if every time the guy wanted to kiss his wife the priest had to be there and say:
You may now kiss the bride.
And then later after the whole thing went bad the priest would say:
You may now divorce the bride.
Harold was fascinated by divorce proceedings and outcomes.
A very beautiful dark blue bird with black eyes and a beak that looked like it had a small smile flew through the rectangle.
Harold thought that say for instance a husband got up one morning and drove to the nearest airport and didn’t tell his wife he was doing this and then he got on a plane and flew three and a half hours to another city and then he rented a car and drove two hours out to a small town and his wife didn’t know anything about this and there was a bank in this town and then he went in to rob the bank and then during the robbery tragically one of the security guards was killed and he was arrested and then he was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison and the wife didn’t know anything about this plan, she didn’t contribute to the plan, she didn’t help organize the plan, she had nothing to do with it, the husband thought of this and did all of it completely on his own, and now he’s going to do 25 years to life in prison, was she going to do half?
One time in class Steven Srike raised his hand and asked Ms. Yuka if mass murder meant that all murders took place in Massachusetts and Harold remembered that the way Ms. Yuka told him this was not what it meant was so kind and gentle and loving that he wanted to hug her.
Harold’s childhood was taking place in Massachusetts.
A very small red and yellow beaked bird flew through the rectangle in Harold’s head and he wondered what was written on the other side of the blackboard.
The blackboard was green. Yes it was. This was another piece of knowledge going into his head which was that the world was nuts and even the people in charge were very wrong on things even though they were adults.
He wanted to raise his hand and ask Ms. Yuka what color the blackboards were in China but he didn’t because he just wasn’t in the mood.
Harold raised his hand.
Yes, Harold?
Ms. Yuka, do you happen to know what’s written on the other side of the blackboard?
Excuse me?
Nothing.
Harold asked it quietly on purpose so she couldn’t understand just to amuse himself.
Harold raised his hand.
Yes Harold?
Ms. Yuka, did you know that rickshaws were in Japan before they were in China where their popularity really took off at the turn of the century?
Excuse me Harold?
Nothing.
Ms. Yuka asked the class who knew where Miami was and Harold didn’t know why because he was busy with his own mind and his own life and part of him thought that being asked a question by Ms. Yuka or anyone really was an invasion of privacy.
In fact he remembered when his grandfather told him that he considered being alive an invasion of privacy.
He was in and out of paying attention like someone who was away and occasionally came by to pick up their mail.
It became a routine for Harold that whenever Ms. Yuka said:
May I have your attention.
Under his breath he would say:
Get your own attention.
He did of course know exactly where Miami was because of the black globe and because his family had gone to Florida one summer on vacation.
They went in the summer because it was cheaper.
Harold remembered driving by a billboard that was advertising glass bottom boats and just then a bird flew through the rectangle in his head and he thought wouldn’t it be great if he had a pair of glass bottom shoes that he could wear on the glass bottom boat with no socks on so that if the fish looked up they could for the first time in their lives see bare feet that weren’t in the water.
One of Harold’s hobbies was to try to see the world through the eyes of other people or animals.
He learned to do this by doing the opposite of what his mother did.
Elizabeth raised her hand.
Yes Elizabeth?
It’s in Florida. You drive through it when you go to the Florida Keys which is where Ernest Hemingway used to live.
Yes, very good, Elizabeth.
Harold raised his hand.
Yes, Harold.
Nothing.
He raised his hand again.
Do you have a question, Harold? When you raise your hand you’re supposed to have a question.
What was the name of that tribe of Indians you were talking about a few months ago that had two names?
That was the Lakota and the white man called them Sioux. Why do you ask?
Just curious.
He thought the Lakota was the most interesting thing Ms. Yuka had ever talked about.
Ms. Yuka was a stunningly average looking woman.
She was about between 28 and 32ish years old, 5' 8" tall. With a build that was about 15% slimmer than medium.
She wore a black skirt that went to just above her knees. And usually some kind of shirt/blouse type thing. Always black flat heeled shoes.
Dark dark brown eyes that showed her mostly happy very alive spirit.
Shoulder-length black hair that she wore in different female type arrangements.
Ms. Yuka loved being an elementary school teacher. The class would never ever know how much.
She partially grew up in Chengde China, which is 111 miles from Beijing.
At the age of 8 her family moved to South Dakota then to New England.
Once Ms. Yuka gave the class the assignment to write their autobiographies right then, in one hour. Her mistake was saying there was no wrong way of doing it.
Harold wrote: Born and now 7. The end.
100% direct, accurate, true.
Harold loved living in the circus in his head. He saw his mind as a soup made up of a mixture of what was on the inside of his head and what was on the outside of his head.
He considered himself a brain chef.
This is how Harold saw what was happening inside his head.
He felt the way his mind worked was that there were thousands and thousands and thousands of tiny birds in his head and each bird represented a single thought.
There was also a little very very small rectangle in the middle of his brain. Like an empty window frame or an empty picture frame.
The birds were much smaller than the frame.
They were flying all around randomly in his mind which was like an indoor sky.
When one of these birds flew through the rectangle whatever thought that bird represented that’s what Harold would think about.
That’s why it seemed like he would jump from subject to subject. It was because of the birds and the rectangle.
For instance a bird that represented lifeboats once flew through the rectangle.
So Harold was now thinking about lifeboats which led to this:
There were 25 kids in the class—what if they were on a ship that was sinking?
He figured that a lifeboat could only take 20 people so which 5 kids wouldn’t get on?
Slowly he looked around the room trying to imagine who would be the lucky ones.
This reminded him of the tragedy of the Titanic. Not nearly enough lifeboats.
And then the fact that the sinking of the ship, April 15, 1912, knocked the opening of Fenway Park that same week out of the headlines.
Which caused him to wonder how Carl Yastrzemski would do next season.
That bird started a tangent festival in Harold’s head.
A tangent festival.
Who would ever have known that the subject of lifeboats would lead to the left fielder for the Boston Red Sox.
God was hilarious. If there was a God.
A very black bird with orange wing tips flew into the rectangle and then circled within it a couple of times and then flew out bringing this thought about lifeboats:
Why don’t any of the lifeboats in the history of the world have sails? They would be sail lifeboats
and they could just sail all the way to safety, even thousands of miles.
Harold also had thoughts on his own that were not brought by the birds.
For instance he felt there should be lifeguard chairs everywhere because people needed